Celestial Navigation: A Practical Guide to Knowing Where You Are
By David Berson
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About this ebook
Celestial navigation, in all its forms, is nearly as old as mankind. Anyone who can master its intricacies stands at the end of a long line of master navigators that is centuries oldan expert among many who would be lost with electronics.
David Berson, a columnist for Ocean Navigator magazine and an instructor at both the Ocean Navigator School of Seamanship and onboard the training schooner Ocean Star, offers here an approach that is refreshing, unique, and sure to attract a new generation of readers looking to demystify this essential art for sailors.
Through his hands-on coursework Berson has developed a practical and learnable method of teaching that has appealed to a new generation of students. He will share his proven method here for the first time.
While many books on celestial navigation insist this age-old art is needed only when electronics fail, Berson uses a unique approach that allows boaters to combine both the modern and the traditional. No other books does that.
In Celestial Navigation, as he does in his popular column and classes, Berson simplifies the math that so often frightens and deters potential students.
Berson takes the same approach with his writing that he does with his classes and columns,informal true-life anecdotes that entertain as well as educate. To Berson, celestial navigation is personal and valuable. Anyone reading this book will catch his contagious enthusiasm.
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Reviews for Celestial Navigation
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Book preview
Celestial Navigation - David Berson
Foreword
by Tim Queeney
Celestial navigation is a wonderfully simple and reliable method for finding your way across the sea. No high tech gear, no electronics, and no electricity at all is required. It’s that basic—a throwback to an age of canvas sails and ships built of timber.
Most people have not even seen the device most frequently used in celestial navigation: it’s called a sextant. It’s a cool-looking instrument with a handle and some mirrors and a sliding arm on a scale that you can learn to use after some practice. Dead simple, really.
A sextant … oh, and a nautical almanac also comes in handy. The almanac is a book with rows and columns of dates and numbers. It’s used to find the position of the sun, moon, planets, and stars. These are what you point the sextant at. So that’s it, a sextant and an almanac are all you need to engage in the art of celestial navigation.
Plus, of course, sight reduction tables also come in handy. These are more books with rows and columns of tiny numbers (maybe use a ruler to keep your place). The sight reduction tables are how you start with a sight of the sun, for example, and end up with a Line of Position. This isn’t the same as a latitude/longitude fix. Anyway, the key thing to remember is that this simple navigation technique only requires a sextant, nautical almanac, and sight reduction tables.
You’ll need a watch, too. To get your Line of Position of the sun, you need to know the time you took the sight, down to the exact second. But watches are so accurate these days and inexpensive, too. So a sextant, almanac, sight tables, and a watch and you’re good to go.
You might also want some plotting sheets, dividers, parallel rules, pencils, erasers, triangles, a drawing compass, and a few more things. Along with some time to practice your sextant work and plotting and familiarity with dead reckoning and star identification and a few more things too tangential to address here.
Simple.
Wait, you’re saying that’s not so simple? That a GPS (global positioning system) gives you a position and so why carry around all that stuff and have to practice with it too?
It’s a fair point.
Utilizing a GPS is way easier and quicker and it is omnipresent. Why bother with anything else? The reasons to learn celestial navigation really boil down to two:
1. A backup system in case your electrical items fail and all your extra batteries go dead (okay, unlikely, but it could happen). Which brings us to reason number 2 (which really should be reason number 1, I guess).
2. You learn celestial navigation for the same reason you learn to ski, play video games, or sail, for that matter: because it’s fun and rewarding.
There’s nothing quite like that feeling of self-sufficiency and accomplishment (except perhaps Nordic skiing across Antarctica in the austral winter eating only pemmican) when an island swims up on the horizon exactly when and where you said it would. Your shipmates will be amazed that all you used to navigate the passage was a sextant, almanac, sight reduction tables, plotting sheet, parallel rules—well, you get the idea.
—Tim Queeney
Editor, Ocean Navigator magazine
Foreword
by Eben Whitcomb
For several thousand years celestial navigation has developed to help accurately determine a ship’s position whilst on the open sea. This began with efforts to fix the altitude of celestial bodies, principally the sun and polaris, for a value of latitude. The value of longitude, on the other hand, eluded navigators for ages. But in 1714, the British Parliament passed the Longitude Act, which awarded various prizes for practical methods of determining longitude. It took considerable time before the largest prize was awarded to Mr. John Harrison (deceased by that time), who had invented a chronometer capable of keeping accurate time at sea (a pendulum clock will not work on a ship). Another big winner calculated the time for a voyage from England to Jamaica to an accuracy of less than ten seconds. Unfortunately, the cost of such an instrument was so great as to be unaffordable by most mariners.
In 1830, Captain Robert FitzRoy outfitted the rebuilt Beagle for a four-year voyage of circumnavigation (with Charles Darwin aboard as naturalist). The voyage’s purpose was to map the exact latitude and longitude of islands and continents along his route. The Admiralty outfitted the ship with sixteen chronometers and Captain FitzRoy purchased an additional six at his own expense! But even with this accurate time, it was necessary to perform complicated mathematics to reach the end result.
We have come a long way since then and most of us have been seduced by today’s electronic navigation. This tends to leave many with the impression that to work out your geographic position back in the day was extremely difficult, requiring a lot of calculations and new definitions. Having taught sailors and would-be sailors celestial navigation for thirty-plus years, David Berson has done us a great service in creating a step-by-step procedure that is simple, straightforward, and easy to learn.
And when learning celestial navigation, you do not have to be a mathematician or an astronomer, and yet you will feel confident that you will reach your destination when you are on that open ocean voyage. Once started there are many refinements that may be added, if you wish, but with the basics David has presented in this volume, you will enjoy the satisfaction it gives when you launch your vessel from the dock and go to sea with confidence (and it also will supply a great subject for small talk at cocktail parties).
—Captain Eben Whitcomb
Introduction
There are so many misconceptions surrounding the learning and practice of celestial navigation that it is no surprise that many are loathe to tackle the subject. They believe, incorrectly, that they have to be some sort of wizard with numbers before they can be proficient. It is true that once, a long time ago, in a faraway place, mariners had to be familiar with spherical trigonometry and all sorts of other mathematical exotica in order to calculate position. But no longer. All that changed during the Second World War when thousands of young men were tasked to learn celestial navigation in ninety days so they could take command of vessels.
Sight reduction tables were simplified and knowledge of spherical trigonometry was no longer necessary. The same process took place amongst young pilots who needed to learn how to navigate as they flew planes across the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The sight reduction tables we now use (HO249) were specifically designed for these airborne navigators. So the myth of having to be an accomplished whiz at numbers in order to navigate is just that—a myth. True, we still have to know how to add and subtract, but even for those of us who slept through school, this is not that great a challenge.
The other misconception about celestial navigation is that it is outmoded and has no value. Certainly with the proliferation of GPS and its amazing accuracy, there is a point to be made. But GPS relies on satellites and electronic hocus pocus that is neither easy nor inexpensive to troubleshoot. Celestial navigation on the other hand is virtually foolproof once you comprehend the basics, and so important that the US Navy has reinstated teaching it to its cadets at the Naval Academy. I am not suggesting that you choose one method over another. You can have a reliable, accurate GPS aboard a ship and still practice celestial navigation. Actually, GPS will make you a better student of the celestial because it acts as a master teacher.
Another argument against learning celestial navigation is that it just takes too much time. This is a fair point. It is easier and faster to push a button. But so what? Most yachts are moving at 10 mph or less, so there’s plenty of time at sea to sleep, eat, stand watch, and even practice celestial navigation. It just means you’ll have less time to read trashy novels.
Many of these misconceptions, ironically, have been promoted by those who actually practice celestial navigation, especially those who practiced it during the Second World War. Navigation was kept as much a mystery as possible to the rest of